scholarly journals Credit Constraint Exports in Countries with Different Degrees of Contract Enforcement

2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zi-Yi Guo ◽  
Yangxiaoteng Luo

We theoretically consider firms’ export decisions in a heterogeneous firm framework. The paper assumes firms have idiosyncratic productivity levels and are credit-constrained in the export market. Firms in different countries have different degrees of credit constraints. Because of imperfect financial markets, firms might not be able to get the financial support to export even although they are profitable enough from the foreign market. In a country with strong contract enforcement, firms are more likely to export and export to more destinations; while in a country with weak contract enforcement, firms are more likely to be constrained by liquidity and export to fewer destinations. However, for those firms whose productivity is very low or very high, these influences do not exist. Moreover, we consider technology shocks and illustrate that technology shocks will further impede firms’ export decisions.

2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 1181-1203
Author(s):  
Qun Tan ◽  
Carlos M.P. Sousa

PurposeTo help firms with their international operations, governments often create policies and support mechanisms, but its influence on the firm's exit decision has so far been ignored. Hence, the purpose of this study is to examine the impact of home-country governmental support on the firm's exit decision.Design/methodology/approachThe authors test their conceptual model using multiple informants as well as secondary data from China. The sample consists of 360 valid questionnaires from 180 firms. Binary logistics regression is used to test the conceptual framework.FindingsBy demonstrating that resource-based and institutional constructs are highly dependent, the authors show how home-country governmental support interacts with the foreign affiliate's past performance to explain the decision to remain or exit a foreign market. The results indicate that while governmental financial support reduces the likelihood of exiting a poorly performing business in the foreign market, governmental non-financial support surprisingly has an opposite effect.Originality/valueWhile there has been an increasing number of firms exiting foreign markets, this area of research is still limited. The study also contributes to the literature by focusing on home-country governmental financial and non-financial support to explain the firm's exit decision – an issue that has been ignored and is expected to be particularly relevant for firms from emerging economies.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 318-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Han-Mo Oh ◽  
Dennis B. Arnett ◽  
Sang Bong An

Purpose A appreciable number of exporters have successfully developed their markets in foreign countries although they have little prior experience in those countries. Advocating that indirect learning plays a crucial role in explaining this phenomenon, the purpose of this paper is attempted to investigate whether and how learning indirectly from competitors and interfirm relationships enables exporters to successful expand their business into foreign markets. Design/methodology/approach Drawing on the knowledge-based theory of the firm and the late-mover advantage theory, the authors developed an empirically testable model that explains and predicts the effects of indirect learning on the success of export market expansion. The model was tested using a complied archival data set in regard to exporters’ market expansion events and international accounting. The sampling frame was the events of Korean exporters’ market expansion. Findings Empirical evidence shows that exporters’ indirect learning from domestic, local, global competitors and from interfirm relationships influence their success of market expansion. In addition, indirect learning from domestic rivals and from interfirm relationships has a more positive effect on the success of expansion into emerging markets than into developed markets. Research limitations/implications Because the authors employed an event-study method, the limitations of this method can be applied to the present research. In addition, because of the empirical context, the results of the research may lack generalizability. The authors, however, provided an understanding how an exporter can succeed in a foreign market specifically when it has lack of direct experience in the market. Practical implications The results of the current research suggested that an exporter should try to learn from local, domestic, and global rivals experienced in a foreign market in order to succeed in the market. In addition, exporters should be affiliated with business groups or partnerships because these affiliations can strengthen the information-sharing mechanisms. Moreover, an exporter should focus first on learning from local rivals and then domestic rivals in order to develop proper expansion strategies. Finally, an exporter should attempt to more actively learn from rivals and interfirm relationships when it targets an emerging market than a developed market. Originality/value Prior studies have emphasized the effects of a firm’s direct learning on market development success. The authors, however, filled a knowledge gap of the impacts of learning in two aspects. First, the authors provided an understanding of the effects of indirect learning on market expansion success. Second, the authors demonstrated these effects in the context of export.


2012 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 424-441 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Eibe Sørensen ◽  
Tage Koed Madsen

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to investigate the association of international orientation and market orientation and their joint effects on export market success. Additionally, it aims to examine how firms’ foreign market portfolio diversity moderates this association.Design/methodology/approachOn the basis of a review of the literature on market orientation and international orientation in relation to manufacturers’ performance on export markets, the paper proposes a set of hypotheses. The hypotheses are empirically tested using 249 questionnaire responses from CEOs supplemented with census data.FindingsThe results indicate that international orientation is positively related to export market success and that this relationship is independent of market portfolio diversity. The paper provides insights to the limitations of the dominant position that holds market orientation as an undisputed valuable strategic capability since market orientation has different non‐linear associations with export market success depending on market portfolio diversity. Finally, the results indicate that the joint effects of international orientation and market orientation on export market success only are present for firms with a focused market portfolio.Research limitations/implicationsThe authors argue that the performance implications of different strategic orientations on export market success are context‐dependent and that firms’ market portfolio diversity assists in providing this nuanced insight. The study's empirical cross‐sectional setting limits inference about causality among the constructs.Practical implicationsWhile all exporting manufacturing firms may benefit from an international orientation, business practitioners are advised to pay particular attention to the diversity of their foreign market portfolio prior to allocating resources to market‐oriented activities.Originality/valueIn this empirical contribution, the authors show how international orientation explains performance differentials among manufacturing exporters as well as how market orientation positively moderates this relationship. Furthermore, the paper shows the context dependency of the value of firms’ market orientation on the basis of export market portfolio diversity.


2009 ◽  
Vol 13 (S1) ◽  
pp. 133-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanjay K. Chugh

I demonstrate that the precise timing of financial markets and goods markets in a simple cash good/credit good model does not matter for the main results in the Ramsey literature on optimal fiscal and monetary policy. In Ramsey models based on Lucas and Stokey [Journal of Monetary Economics12, 55–93 (1983)] and Chari, Christiano, and Kehoe [Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking23, 519–539 (1991)], nominal money holdings are freely adjustable in response to shocks in the period in which they will be used to purchase consumption. In contrast, under Svensson [Journal of Political Economy93, 919–944 (1985)] timing, nominal balances cannot be adjusted in the period they will be used. The broad finding is that benchmark Ramsey results are not very sensitive to this slight, ultimately ad hoc, modification. In particular, optimal inflation continues to display very high variability just as in the original models, although this can differ depending on exactly which exogenous processes are driving the economy. That the basic results in the Ramsey literature are not sensitive to the choice of cash/credit timing is reassuring as Ramsey analysis is applied to an ever-expanding set of model environments.


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 235-258
Author(s):  
Mariola Ciszewska-Mlinaric ◽  
Krzysztof Obloj ◽  
Marcus Hülsdau

The purpose of this study is to broaden our understanding of the post-entry effects of psychic distance by asking what markets - psychically close or distant - became over time the most strategically significant for European SMEs. Specifically, we analyse whether psychic distance is a valid predictor of the strategic significance of foreign market, as well as whether and how this relationship is moderated by export diversification. Contrary to expectations, the study findings reveal that psychic distance to the foreign market actually increases its post-entry strategic significance, providing support for the phenomenon of PD paradox.


2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 309-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodney Edvinsson

The decline of interest rates during the early modern period is considered an important factor in the subsequent rise of capitalist society. This article uses unique empirical material based on bills of exchange in Stockholm between 1660 and 1685 to estimate underlying ‘shadow interest rates’. It shows that annual rates ‘according’ to Stockholm were very high, mostly above 10 per cent, an indication of underdeveloped financial integration between Stockholm and the main European centres. There are also indications of a decline in these rates during the period studied, reflecting improved efficiency in Swedish financial markets.


2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 860-879 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felicitas Evangelista ◽  
Lancy Mac

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to determine the relative importance of deliberate learning, learning from experience and relevant learning co-variates in pursuing market learning, and to assess the impact of market learning on export performance in smaller firms. Design/methodology/approach A theoretical model was initially developed and subsequently tested using survey data. The standard two step approach of first testing the measurement model and then estimating the structural model was adopted. Findings The results provide concrete evidence that among SMEs, deliberate learning has a greater impact on export market learning as compared to experience accumulation, and that market learning has a significant effect on export performance. The results also show that absorptive capacity and commitment to learning are significant co-variates of market learning. Originality/value This paper focuses on the role of deliberate learning vis-a-vis learning by experience in achieving foreign market learning and export performance in smaller firms. It addresses a major limitation of organisational learning studies which tend to focus mainly on experiential learning and organisational learning in large organisations.


Author(s):  
Pol Antràs

This chapter develops simple imperfect-contracting variants of the Melitz model of exporting and discusses empirical evidence suggestive of the role of these frictions as determinants of the structure of international trade flows. It explores both theoretically as well as empirically the significance of weak contract enforcement for the export decisions of firms and, more broadly, for the structure of international trade flows. As explained in Chapter 1, the rapid growth in intermediate input trade has been one of the most prominent developments in the world economy in recent years. At the same time, the contractual relationships that support the phenomenon of offshoring are much more intricate than those that support the mere shipment of goods across countries. Thus, weak contract enforcement has the potential to affect the global organization of production in more profound ways than has been studied so far.


2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-103
Author(s):  
Christian Alunaru

The crisis of financial markets has resulted in dramatic discrepancies between the major currencies. The unforeseen, significant rise in the value of the Swiss franc has in turn led to a very high exchange rate between the Romanian currency (RON) and the Swiss franc, impacting many debtors of Romanian citizens who had concluded Swiss franc loan agreements, and who had then become unable to pay off their loans anymore in the light of the higher exchange rate. In order to alleviate these harsh consequences, the Romanian legislator has passed a law, providing for alternative means of debt payments, namely through so-called “transfer in lieu of payment.” This article analyses this statutory solution, shedding light on problems resulting from this legal institute, in particular in the context of Romanian and European jurisdiction. It concludes that “transfer in lieu of payment” has turned out to be an unfavorable legal instrument - in contrast to other, already well established legal solutions for these particular cases - such as resolving disputes between debtors and creditors over CHF debt payments through legislation on unfair contract terms, or private insolvency rules.


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